ed Ad Elections Due Wednesday Class Officers, ASC, AWS Delegates On Ballots By DOUG PARKER (Of The Daily Kansan Staff) All students will be able to vote at the general elections Wednesday as four different ballots will be offered. Polls will be open from 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. in Marvin, Lindley, Malott, and Strong halls; the Student Union, and the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. Voting will be for freshman class officers, freshman dormitory women representatives to the All Student Council, freshman women representatives to the Associated Women Students' Senate, and for a referendum to change the ASC constitution. All students may vote for the referendum. One part of the referendum will be to change the number of votes needed to elect representatives to the ASC from the minimum of 75 to a minimum of 1. Could-Not Vote Last spring two representatives from the School of Journalism and the cooperative and professional fraternity district were given a seat on the Council but no vote since they did not poll the minimum 75 votes. The referendum, if passed, will allow the representatives to have a vote immediately. The referendum will also offer two parts that were dropped last spring from the constitution. One is that students have the right to petition for impeachment of officers of the ASC and to see that desired legislation be acted upon. The other is that all vacancies on the Council must be filled by students from the same district as the vacated representative. Expects Bigger Turnout The chairman of the ASC, Dick Patterson, Kansas City, Kan. junior, said, "I think the freshman class officer elections will have a higher turnout in the general elections than in the primary. As far as the referendum is concerned I hope we will have a big turnout." He said that students who violate the campaign rules of the ASC constitution can be tried before the Student Court and pay up to a $100 fine. With the final deadline Nov. 4, the first issue of the 1958 Jayhawker is nearing completion, Tom Pettit. Topeka senior and Jayhawker editor, said today. Nov.20 Date Set For First Annual "All pictures except those of the football games are now in." Pettit said. "Copy is nearly complete and we hope to have the issue out by Nov. 20." This is the first year that the fall issue will cover the first football games, Pettit said. This issue will include the KU-Miami game. "We urge all house representatives to get party pictures and house information for house write-ups in as soon as possible." Pettit said. Jayhawkers will not be available after June 30. 1958. Those who buy yearbooks are asked to pick up issues as they come out to avoid confusion in the business office, Pettit said. Judge Selected For Revue Skits Dr. Lee Mitchell, director of the dramatic theatre at Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill., has been selected to judge scripts for the 1958 Rock Chaik Revue, Shirley Andrish, Topeka senior and Revue producer said Thursday. Miss Andrish told a meeting of house directors that completed scripts will be due Dec. 20. Scripts selected will be announced the first week in January she said. Ex-Student Drowns In Kaw Larry Leon Sawyer, 24, a former KU student, was presumed by Lawrence police to have been drowned late Thursday after he was swept over the 15-foot Bowersock Dam on the Kaw River north of Lawrence. John Layman, 28, also a former student at KU, was with Mr. Sawyer in Mr. Layman's motor boat when it ran out of gas and drifted toward the dam. Mr. Layman jumped from the boat and clung to bridge pilings. He was rescued by Melvin Lesher, Lawrence fireman, who was lowered on a rope. The incident occurred at 3:15 p.m. Mr. Layman was pulled from the water 30 minutes later. Mr. Layman said when he jumped from the boat he called to Mr. Sawyer to throw him one end of a 25-foot rope so he could secure the boat and keep it from drifting toward the dam. Mr. Sawyer was unable to get the line to him. Mr. Layman said Mr. Sawyer could not swim. There was no sign of Mr. Sawyer or the boat when rescue operations were discontinued because of darkness. Mr. Layman and Mr. Sawyer were both enrolled at KU last semester. Mr. Sawyer's wife, Mrs. Anna Mae Sawyer, and her 1 $ _{1/2} $ -year old son, Thomas, live in Lawrence. Daily hansan 55th Year, No. 31 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Dean For A Day Candidates Picked Organized houses have turned in names of 22 candidates for Dean For A Day. These names will appear on the primary ballot Nov. 6. Women must vote for three candidates or their ballots not be valid. Six finalists will be selected. Polls will be open from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Student Union, Fraser and Strong halls and Music and Dramatic Arts Building. The final voting will take place on All Women's Day Nov. 12 The winners, a dean and two assistant deans, will trade places Nov. 13 with Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women, and Miss Mary Peg Hardman and Miss Patricia Patterson, assistant deans. Candidates are Sharon Bevan, Mission, Dee Daniels, Beloit, Ann Johnson, Topeka, Mary Anne Webster and Joyce Klemp, Leavenworth, Sheila Nation, Chanute, Carolyn Bailey, Scranton, Nancy Shaver, Independence, Ann Miller, Dodge City, Mae Cheltain, Glencoe, Ill., Ellen Proudfit and Sandra Falwell, Kansas City, Kan., Margaret Koch, Fredonia, Donna Daise, Ruleton, Sophie Stathopoulos, Kansas City, Mo., all seniors. Annette Sebron and Mary Sue Taylor, Kansas City, Kan., Betty Hailey, Kansas City, Mo., Gretchen Engler, Hutchinson, juniors. Barbara Bach and Nancy Varney, Vancouver, City, Mo. freshmen Football Player Still Missing The freshman football player who was supposedly on his way back to Lawrence Wednesday, after being missing for five days, has not checked in at his dormitory. Curtis McClinton, Wichita freshman, was in Colorado for five days during which time his parents and University officials reported him missing. Friday, Oct. 25, 1957 His mother told a Daily Kansan reporter by telephone Tuesday evening that she had talked to her son on the phone that afternoon and he was leaving Manitou Springs. Colo, for Lawrence Wednesday morning. —(Daily Kansan photo) AWS CANDIDATES—Two of the above women will be chosen to represent the freshman women in the Associated Women's Students Senate Wednesday in the general elections. They are (from left), Ann Hoopingarner, Dallas, Tex.; Betsy Lyon, Kansas City; Sharon Mather, Stafford; Ada Sue Cox, Cherryvale; Carole Ann Cowan, Independence, Kan.; Mary Stephenson, Pittsburg, and Carolyn Caskey, Independence, Mo. Nan Newton, Kansas City, Kan. is not in the picture. 32 Houses In SUA Carnival Enter Skits Thirty-two organized houses have submitted skit or booth names and preliminary outlines for the Student Union Activities Carnival to be held Nov. 9 in the Student Union, Delta Sigma Phi. "Big 8 Rat Race." Sirma Fha Epsilon, "Dolly Dunk," Alpha Kappa Lambda, "Upset the Girls," Varsity House, "Varsity House Vanities." Carruth-O'Leary, "The Inferno." Delta Upsilon, "The Beaver Shoot," Phi Delta Theta, "Strippers Through the Ages." Phi Kaopa Tau, "Sherwood's Forest," Pi Kappa Alpha, "You Are There," Chi Omega, "Sanphire Sue's Sloon," Gamma Phi Beta, "Lost Week-end," Phi Kappa, "Rat Roulette." Titles were unavailable for Phi Gamma Delta and Sigma Nu entries. The skits and booths will be open this year from 6 to 11 p.m. Advisors, helping entering houses with production problems, will be provided this year by the SUA. Any house wanting an advisor should call the SUA office, KU 477. Medical Nobel Prize Won By Italian Sigma Alpha Epsilon, "Wild, Wild World," Delta Chi, "Monkey's on Campus," Kappa Sigma, "Is Shooting Sputnik," Lambda Chi Alpha, "Smear Noff's 'O Ma Jigger." Alpha Tau Omega, "A Day in Budda Land." Phi Kappa Psi, "Poka-Rino." Houses entered, and skit or booth titles, are Alba Phi, "Fishing with the Phis," Delta Delta Delta, "Take Care of My Little Earl," Alpha Chi Omega, "Ivy Grows in Dogpatch," Kappa Kappa Gamma, "Bacteria Blues," Alpha Omicron Pi, "Flick-O-Rama." Kappa Alpha Theta. "Carnival Carousel," Pi Beta Phi, "Ivy Lypson," Delta Gamma. "Briga-Doom," Alpha Delta Pi. "Chimney-Cindy," Gertrude Sellards Pearson upperclass, "Gertie's Dive," Gertrude Sellards Pearson freshmen, "Justice of the Peace." Corbin - North College, "Madeline of North-Corbine" Dr. Daniel Bovet, Swiss-born Italian scientist, who pioneered the development of antibiistamines and put dart poison to use as a medicinal aid, was awarded the 1957 Nobel Prize for medicine Thursday. The award, approximately $42,000, is from the foundation established by dynamite inventor Alfred Nobel. It is the first Nobel Prize to Italian medicine in 50 years. Weather Clearing and colder most of the state with hard freeze tonight. Saturday partly cloudy with light snows continuing extreme west. Low tonight in the 20's. High Saturday 35-42. Low this morning was 31. Low Thursday was 45 and the high was 46.